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“One Bitcoin Transaction Per Decade”: Analyst Says Math Favors XRP

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The YouTube show host, who says she personally holds both XRP and Bitcoin, stresses she is “not here to attack Bitcoin,” crediting it with proving digital scarcity and creating a new asset class.

But Kamilah Stevenson draws a hard line between what Bitcoin was “designed for” and what many of its advocates claim it will become. The core claim: Bitcoin’s base-layer capacity makes it structurally ill-suited to act as the primary payments infrastructure for the global economy.

The video centers on one calculation. Bitcoin’s main chain handles roughly 5–7 transactions per second. Spread across 8 billion people, that yields “somewhere in the neighborhood of one Bitcoin transaction for every decade” per person.

That, she says, is “simply what you get when you divide the capacity by population,” and it undercuts the idea of Bitcoin as the money “everybody spends” on a daily basis.

Stevenson acknowledges the standard Bitcoin counterpoint: second-layer solutions like the Lightning Network can bundle payments off-chain and settle later.

But the critique is that “every one of those layers eventually has to settle back down onto the base layer,” which still moves only a “handful of transactions per second.” In her framing, no matter how tall the off-chain “building” becomes, the “narrow door” of the base layer remains the ultimate bottleneck.

From there, the focus turns to XRP. Dr. Stevenson says the XRP Ledger was “engineered” for the priorities that banks, payment companies and governments actually care about: transactions per second, settlement finality, and predictability.

Kamilah Stevenson describes it as capable of “well over a thousand transactions per second,” with payments reaching finality in roughly three to five seconds.

That difference in architecture, she argues, makes Bitcoin (BTC) closer to a “vault” — a store of value for a “relatively small number of people” — and XRP closer to a “highway” designed to move high volumes of value across the financial system.

In Stevenson's words, “the architecture decides the destiny,” and “the networks built for movement are the ones that end up moving the world.”

The video then shifts from network design to investor positioning and tax strategy, highlighting the use of a Roth IRA to hold XRP and other assets for long-term, tax-advantaged growth.

While that advice is framed as educational rather than prescriptive, the underlying message is crystal clear: if settlement rails like XRP’s ledger end up underpinning institutional payments, early holders could see asymmetric upside — provided they manage the tax implications of any future gains.

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